On Thu, Dec 5, 2024 at 3:16 PM Danilo Krummrich <dakr@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > Implement the generic `Registration` type and the `DriverOps` trait. > > The `Registration` structure is the common type that represents a driver > registration and is typically bound to the lifetime of a module. However, > it doesn't implement actual calls to the kernel's driver core to register > drivers itself. > > Instead the `DriverOps` trait is provided to subsystems, which have to > implement `DriverOps::register` and `DrvierOps::unregister`. Subsystems typo > have to provide an implementation for both of those methods where the > subsystem specific variants to register / unregister a driver have to > implemented. > > For instance, the PCI subsystem would call __pci_register_driver() from > `DriverOps::register` and pci_unregister_driver() from > `DrvierOps::unregister`. > > Co-developed-by: Wedson Almeida Filho <wedsonaf@xxxxxxxxx> > Signed-off-by: Wedson Almeida Filho <wedsonaf@xxxxxxxxx> > Signed-off-by: Danilo Krummrich <dakr@xxxxxxxxxx> [...] > +/// The [`RegistrationOps`] trait serves as generic interface for subsystems (e.g., PCI, Platform, > +/// Amba, etc.) to provide the corresponding subsystem specific implementation to register / > +/// unregister a driver of the particular type (`RegType`). > +/// > +/// For instance, the PCI subsystem would set `RegType` to `bindings::pci_driver` and call > +/// `bindings::__pci_register_driver` from `RegistrationOps::register` and > +/// `bindings::pci_unregister_driver` from `RegistrationOps::unregister`. > +pub trait RegistrationOps { > + /// The type that holds information about the registration. This is typically a struct defined > + /// by the C portion of the kernel. > + type RegType: Default; This Default implementation doesn't seem useful. You initialize it and then `register` calls a C function to initialize it. Having `register` return an `impl PinInit` seems like it would work better here. > + /// Registers a driver. > + /// > + /// On success, `reg` must remain pinned and valid until the matching call to > + /// [`RegistrationOps::unregister`]. > + fn register( > + reg: &mut Self::RegType, If the intent is that RegType is going to be the raw bindings:: type, then this isn't going to work because you're creating &mut references to the raw type without a Opaque wrapper in between. > + name: &'static CStr, > + module: &'static ThisModule, > + ) -> Result; > + > + /// Unregisters a driver previously registered with [`RegistrationOps::register`]. > + fn unregister(reg: &mut Self::RegType); I believe this handles pinning incorrectly. You can't hand out &mut references to pinned values. Alice